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Definitions of the word "religion"

More definitions, including our own

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More definitions by academics and others:

"Dhruvtara" posted the following definition on a worldwide weblog
for people from India:

"A fundamental way of thinking and approaching
things. Those who don't do things in the way they are told by their
religion will be punish by some supernatural power. " (Slightly
edited).

Paul Connelly suggests the following definition:

"Religion
originates in an attempt to represent and order beliefs, feelings,
imaginings and actions that arise in response to direct experience of
the sacred and the spiritual. As this attempt expands in its formulation
and elaboration, it becomes a process that creates meaning for itself on
a sustaining basis, in terms of both its originating experiences and its
own continuing responses."1

The Agnosticism / Atheism section on About.com uses an
approach found in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Rather than
attempting to define religion, they describe some of the factors that
are typically found in religion. The About author came up with
the following list:

Characteristically religious feelings (awe, sense of mystery,
sense of guilt, adoration), which tend to be aroused in the presence
of sacred objects and during the practice of ritual.

Prayer and other forms of communication with the supernatural.

A world view, or a general picture of the world as a whole and
the place of the individual therein. This picture contains some
specification of an over-all purpose or point of the world and an
indication of how the individual fits into it.

A more or less total organization of one's life based on the
world view.

A social group bound together by the above. 2,3

From Irving Hexham's "Concise Dictionary of Religions:" 4

Peter Berger: "the human enterprise by which a sacred cosmos is
established."

Emile Durkheim: "a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to
sacred things."

James Frazer: "a propitiation or conciliation of powers superior to man
which are believed to direct or control the course of nature and human life."

Immanuel Kant: "the recognition of all our duties as divine commands."

Karl Marx: "the self-conscious and self-feeling of man who has either not
found himself or has already lost himself again... the general theory of the
world... its logic in a popular form... its moral sanction, its solemn
completion, its universal ground for consolation and justification. It is the
fantastic realization of the human essence..."

Friedrich Schleiermacher: "a feeling for the infinite" and "a feeling of
absolute dependence."

Ninian Smart: "a set of institutionalized rituals with a tradition and
expressing and/or evoking sacral sentiments directed at a divine or
trans-divine focus seen in the context of the human phenomenological
environment and at least partially described by myths or by myths and
doctrines.

Rodney Stark: "any socially organized pattern of beliefs and practices
concerning ultimate meaning that assumes the existence of the supernatural."

Max Weber: "to say what it is, is not possible... the essence of
religion is not even our concern, as we make it our task to study the
conditions and effects of a particular type of social behavior."

Other definitions picked up through random surfing of the Internet:

"The processes by which mankind tries to find meaning in a
chaotic universe."

"That which is of ultimate concern."

"That which gives meaning to our life."

"Notwithstanding all of its respectful liturgy and doxology, religion is, in part, frustration and anger with the Creator, who gave us enough intelligence to understand life's dilemmas, but not enough intelligence to do anything about it." 5

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Some people do not consider their personal spiritual path to be a religion:

Many conservative Christians refer to Christianity not as a
religion but as an intensely personal relationship with Yeshua of Nazareth (a.k.a. Jesus Christ).

Many Native Americans believe that their spiritual beliefs and
practices are not a religion in the normal sense of the term. They form a integral and
seamless part of their very being, totally integrated into their life experience.

Agnostics and Atheists
often do
not regard their beliefs to be a religion. To most, Atheism and Agnosticism simply
represent a single belief about the existence or non-existence of a supreme being.
They do not necessarily include ethical matters as a part of Atheism or
Agnosticism.

The New Age is sometimes referred to as a
religion. However, it is in reality a collection of diverse beliefs and
practices from which a practitioner may select those that appeal to her/him. The individual often grafts
these beliefs and practices onto an established religion.

"Religion
is any specific system of belief about deity, often involving rituals, a code of ethics, a
philosophy of life, and a worldview."

By way of explanation:

"Specific system" includes mutually agreed upon factors held in common by members of a particular faith group. Some religions have as few as two rules concerning belief and practice; others document thousands.

"Belief about deity" can involve a belief in a personal god or goddess, or in a pantheon of gods or goddesses, or in an impersonal creative force, or a belief that no supreme being exists, or honest doubt about the existence of a deity.

"Philosophy of life" focuses on attempting to answer existential questions like: Why am I here?, What is my purpose? What is life all about?, What is the meaning of it all?

"Worldview" is a set of basic, foundational beliefs concerning deity,
humanity and the rest of the universe.

We include
Agnosticism, Atheism,
Humanism, Ethical Culture etc. as religions, because they also contain a
"belief about deity." Their belief may be that they do not
know whether a deity exists, or they have no knowledge of God, or they
sincerely believe that God does not exist. We include them as religions because they fulfill some or all of a person's metaphysical needs -- defined here as of ultimate and fundamental reality. Also, on practical level, Agnostics, Atheists, Humanists, etc. often respond with these words when asked what their religion is.

References:

The following information sources were used to prepare and update the above
essay. The hyperlinks are not necessarily still active today.